Gioacchino Rossini was born on 29 February 1792 in the small town
of Pesaro, now a beach resort on the Adriatic coast of Italy.
Since the 1970s the Pesaro Festival takes place in the town each
August. Under the influence of the Fondazione Rossini it
is dedicated to performing the composer’s operas, preferably in
Critical Editions which it has had, until recently, sole control
in collaboration with the publishers Casa Ricordi and under the
direction of the scholar Philip Gosset. The Festival, together
with the work of the Rossini Foundation, has contributed significantly
to the renaissance of Rossini’s operas. This is now solidly underway
with a rapidly expanding catalogue of the composer’s thirty-nine
operatic works available on CD and DVD. This recording from the
2006 Pesaro Festival extends the availability on record of Rossini’s
first staged opera. As well as an audio performance of La Cambiale
Di Matrimonio from the same series of performances at Pesaro
(see review),
a previous audio recording is included in the collection of the
five San Moise farsi on the Brilliant label (see review)
and is also available separately (Claves 50 9101). A DVD of an
elegantly costumed and staged performance directed by Michael
Hampe from the 1989 Schwetzingen Festival is available from Euroarts
(2054968).
La Cambiale Di
Matrimonio, was premiered at the Teatro San Moisè, Venice,
on 3 November 1810. The San Moisè was the smallest of the theatres in that city
regularly presenting opera. The audience expected new works
and the impresario would commission several comic operas or
farsi each season, guaranteeing at least three performances
of each. The theatre was run on a shoestring and such farsi
required little scenery or staging. The San Moisè had a good
roster of singers and an ideal opening arose for Rossini when
another composer reneged on his contract. Both Rossini’s parents
were musicians. Friends of his family who were members of the
San Moisè roster promoted the young Rossini’s virtues and he
was offered the opportunity to fill the gap. The resultant La
Cambiale Di Matrimonio was the first of five farsi he wrote
for presentation at the San Moisè over the next three years.
Although it lacks the musical sophistication of the last of
those operas, Il Signor Bruschino, it has pace, energy
and wit. La Cambiale Di Matrimonio was well received.
At age twenty Rossini’s career was off to a cracking
start.
The story of La
Cambiale Di Matrimo (The Marriage Contract) concerns the
attempts of Tobia Mill, an English merchant, to force his daughter
Fanny into a marriage with Slook, a rich Canadian merchant who
has offered him a large sum of money to find a suitable wife.
Mill sees this arrangement as merely an exchange of goods between
merchants via a contract. Fanny, however, is in love with Eduardo,
a young man of restricted means. When she learns of her father’s
intentions, and particularly being treated as goods, she lets
Slook know her views. With the help of her chambermaid along
with her lover Eduardo, acting as Mill’s cashier, Slook is at
first threatened and then converted to the cause of the young
lovers. He concedes the contract to Eduardo and generously gives
him money so that Mill cannot object to the marriage. Mill relents
at the prospect of a grandchild within the year.
Whilst extensive
refurbishment goes on at the main theatre in Pesaro many productions
are staged out of town. Any limitations of the location are
in no way evident in this production using a simple single set
of the inside of Mill’s house. His occupation as a merchant
is well represented by the swinging hand crane outside the large
central window and the passing of bales of goods through the
house during the overture. Furnishing and costumes are in period.
The mainly Italian
cast are committed actors bringing out the humour of the opera
with the musical brio of Rossini’s music well handled from the
podium. Paolo Bordogna as the English merchant Mill, and Fabio
Maria Capitanucci as Slook, have nicely differentiated vocal
timbres, and a pleasing ability for vocal characterisation and
acting. Their clear diction is a virtue throughout and particularly
in the duet when Slook tries to warn Mill that all is not well
with his plans (CH.14). The duet that follows (CH.15) is a real
Rossini buffa gem, well delivered and acted. As the goods of
the contract, Fanny, Désirée Rancatore twitters well in the
vocal stratosphere in her aria Vorrei spiegarvi (CH.16)
but is less appealing in her lower voice and lacks a convincing
range of colour and legato. I find her performance a little
disappointing although she is well applauded by the audience.
Désirée Rancatore has sung at some of the best addresses and
her performances as Lucia (review)
and Olympia (review)
have featured on Dynamic DVDs. The singing of the Albanian tenor
Saimir Pirgu as Edoardo is pleasant without having the ideal
head tone required. He makes what he can of his contributions
to the proceedings. Presumably the San Moisè roster did not
feature a tenor of quality as Eduardo does not have an aria.
In her brief aria the Russian-trained Maria Gortsevskaya as
Clarina makes little of her brief aria (CH.13), but her acted
contribution to the proceedings is better.
The orchestra under
the idiomatic direction of Umberto Benedetti Michelangeli play
with verve. The sound is adequate and the video direction is fine.
Any intrusions of applause are measured, warm and commendably
brief. There is some stage noise. As I noted in my review
of the CD of this series of performances, Dynamic have a habit
of recording performances for later issue on DVD. However, whilst
Dynamic is shown as copyright owners this DVD is among the first
to be issued by Naxos in the medium. This seems to me to be wholly
appropriate as Naxos is second to none in their promotion of audio
recordings of Rossini’s operas, both studio and also of live performances
at the Bad Wildbad Festival. If a developing relationship between
Naxos and Dynamic brings worthwhile DVD performances by other
composers from the various Italian Opera Festivals it will be
welcome. This is particularly so in respect of the booklet presentation.
This follows the Naxos tradition of including detailed artist
profiles, regrettably so often lacking elsewhere, not least with
Dynamic CDs and DVDs.
Robert J Farr